Market Collective, A Big Hit!


By Anton S (Student, 8.3)

Recently, grade eights embarked on a mission to complete graphic novels based on a list of short stories including Alice Munroe’s Day Of The Butterfly and Roald Dahl’s Lamb To The Slaughter. During the process of creating the graphic novels we were asked to convey the theme of the story through our illustrations. We were also asked to create graphic novels that draw in the reader through diverse paneling, the introduction of poetic language, and varying points of view. Although this process took over a month to complete the time and effort put into the project was well worth it.

At the end of the unit we were given the opportunity to present our exceptional creations to the City of Calgary. Specifically, the students were able to share their hard work at something called the Kensington Market Collective, which is a place where artists from all over Calgary come to display and sell their original artwork, jewelry, clothes, music and much more. Although we were not selling our novels, on Saturday, Dec. 10th the classes of 8.3 and 8.4 had a chance to showcase their graphic novels at the Kensington Market Collective. Overall, the booth representing our graphic novels at the market was a hit. During the all day session about 14 students took turns showing their work and explaining the process of making a graphic novel. Many came and went to see the wonderful graphic novels that our grade eight classes created. Having our work marked by teachers is nice but having our graphic novels appreciated by a wider community, many of whom were artists, is even better.

Students into Scientists

by Deirdre Bailey and Amy Park

It began with a conversation on how best to develop deep understanding of biological cycles. When we considered simply slicing fruit and vegetables in half and leaving them out in the open to observe the resulting changes, we never anticipated the smells, the new life, or the learning that would ensue.

The suggestion that we use Google Docs to facilitate collaboration and data management through the scientific process provided an excellent opportunity for introducing students to the incredible value of facilitating collaborative research and documentation through technology. See examples of our student work in Google Docs linked here.

From Day 1 to Day 12, our young scientists were engaged, excited, and passionate about their discoveries. Throughout the process, students developed deep understanding of decomposition, the scientific process, collaboration, problem solving, data analysis, and so much more.

The following video outlines the entire process and the amazing learning that resulted.


Verbal Assessments in Physical Education

by Tammy Berry, PE Specialist

Mr. Schmeichel and I are in the process of working on improving on our reporting process by conducting verbal interviews with specific grades of Physical Education students every term.

Our focus questions are as follows:

1) How does an Interview / Conversation (recorded and shared) based Term Assessment allow the students a deeper understanding of the PE programs goals as well as their own areas of strength / areas for improvement?

2) How is this form of assessment and parent feedback a more effective means of communication (compared to the written term-ending comments) for parents with regards to their son/daughters’ progress in PE?

Why are we doing this in PE?

Ultimately many of the outcomes will relate directly to our daily practice as well as the students' experiences and learning. We want to become better teachers, better communicators, better at using technology and a variety of resources to further our practice. We want our students to be healthier, have a higher degree of fitness, and understand where they can improve and take advantage of their strengths on a daily basis. We want the parents to more fully understand their child’s progress as well as improve the communication between teacher-student-parent.

How will we know if we have achieved our goal?

When the feedback from the student, parent and teacher surveys come back and the data is compiled, we will get an understanding of the student/parent/teacher’s perspective on the value of this type of assessment as it relates to student understanding and parent communication.

We welcome your comments and feedback. Please email us at:

Dean Schmeichel or Tammy Berry.

Using the Model Method in Math Problem-solving

by Kevin Sonico

Mr. Cheng and I are conducting a research project in our classrooms on how using the model method or strategy in math improve students' problem-solving skills. Effectiveness of the method will be measured in the increased ability of students to solve word problems and enhanced confidence to communicate their thinking and process.

Students in Singapore are first taught the model method in the 3rd grade. Hoven and Garelick (2007) stated that “[i]n Singapore, where 4th and 8th grade students consistently come in first on international math exams, students learn how to solve problems using the bar model technique.” They go on to write that “the bar modeling tool has taught [students] not only to solve math problems but also to represent them symbolically – the mainstay of algebraic reasoning.”

In choosing to teach this particular method or strategy, that is the model method, we are making problem-solving an integral part of the concept, rather than an add-on. Problem-solving scenarios bring context to the abstract nature of numbers, hopefully adding meaning to the curriculum. Content areas where the model method will be used are fraction, ratio, proportion, percents, and algebra.

For our study, we will document our use of the model method through the exploration of word and numerical problems (around the theme of proportional reasoning). Student progress throughout will be monitored with video journals, quizzes, surveys, interviews, and assignments.

In our years of teaching, we have not seen much evidence from student artifacts that show visual models for solving problems. Making it a focus will expose students to a new way of thinking and problem-solving. In addition, the visual method of teaching has been exclusive to the fractions unit in our practice. Expanding it to other curriculum/content areas encourages us to adapt new teaching strategies and techniques that we may not have previously employed.

We acknowledge that students learn in different ways. The model method argues that “through the construction of a pictorial model to represent the known and unknown quantities and their relationships in a problem, students gain better understanding of the problem and develop their abilities in mathematical thinking and problem-solving.” (Hong, K.T., et al., 2009). By explicitly teaching the model method, we are equipping students with another strategy to use in solving problems aside from the procedural and/or symbolic perspective.

Ultimately, the measure of success is improved confidence among students in solving word problems. As this study focuses on teaching the model method to solve problems, our goal is for students to be utilizing this strategy as a method for problem-solving or as an alternate way of verifying their solutions. Therefore, the number of students using the model method and the frequency with which they utilize the model will also serve as indicators of success. Rubrics will be in place to gauge students’ ability to solve problems.

Another expected outcome is the impact that teaching the model method will have on our teaching practice. If used extensively in the classroom, we will be able to observe the model method’s benefits as well as its limitations. We also hope that other teachers will begin to adapt or implement the model method in some capacity in their practice.

Feel free to contact me via email should you have some feedback or comments on our study. You may also choose to follow me on Twitter (@ksonico). We look forward to connecting with other teachers who use the model method or who are interested in using it in their practice.


References
Hoven, J. & Garelick, B. (2007) Singapore math: simple or complex?. Educational Leadership (vol. 65 no 3).
Hong, K.T., Mei, Y.S., & Lim, J. (2009). The Singapore Model Method for Learning Mathematics. Singapore: Panpac Education.

The Internet is NOT a Library


The Internet is truly not a library, and shouldn't be confused as one. Ask most students what a library is, and they inevitably offer a reply with the words books, information, borrow, etc. included. If you truly understand a library, which in its essence must have at the very minimum, these words- information, evaluated, selected, categorized and organized for access- then the clarification becomes obvious. In Siva Vaidhyanathan's 2010 publication The Googlization of Everything (And Why We Should Worry), he offers a very clear explanation of the mighty search engine (and everything else) we call "Google". The Internet and the dominant search engine of the day, is different in all respects from a library.

We need to ensure our students are aware of the many differences between the Internet and libraries. We don't need to "worry": our students need to be informed, and aware, of these differences, and develop competencies in searching, evaluating and selecting, recording, processing and synthesizing the information into knowledge from both online and print sources. And let's not forget, most libraries include access to the Internet, and online databases. It's not an either/or choice. Rather, it's an informed and integrated selection of the best resources for each specific information need, and best suited to who is doing the research- age, learning style, etc. all come into play. It definitely isn't a simple choice of library OR Internet. Our world is a complex, burgeoning world of information, non-information and misinformation. We, and our students, don't need to "worry" about that, we need to be informed, and astute consumers of information, from all sources.



The "Better" Life Strategy



After studying about different organelles that are present in cells and looking at examples of organisms under the microscope, students in Grade 8 explored the life cycle and life strategies of a unicellular and multicellular organisms. Through their research, students compared and contrasted these two different types of organisms. Students brainstormed on what content areas they could find out about each; these were a few of them: life cycle, life span, reproduction, examples of organisms. Several of them constructed graphic organizers like Venn diagrams and tables.

After collecting and researching, students were then prompted to write paragraphs on this question, "Which organism (unicellular or multicellular) has a "better" life strategy?" using the background research. Their arguments and the quality of them were entirely shaped by the quality of their research. When students seemed to struggle with providing strong arguments, they were urged to provide concrete examples, data, etc.

A pendulum debate followed where the two sides (unicellular vs. multicellular) provided their arguments and counter-arguments. A speaker from each side presented an argument then a rebuttal/counter-argument was made by the opposing side. Students were free to change their opinion/side as arguments and counter-arguments were presented - hence, the strength of one's arguments rested on the number of students you maintained or persuaded to change their opinion.

The ultimate goal of this activity was to acknowledge that despite the diversity that exists among organisms, there lies a common thread: that our need for survival shapes our life strategies and behaviour.

This was the students' first taste of the pendulum debate in Grade 8. This activity will later be used most extensively after this unit, following a persuasive essay on deciding which body system is the most important (to be explored in a later blog post).

Hungry Countries Math Exploration


by Erin Couillard

The last time I looped between grade 6 and 7, I noticed a gap existing in students understanding of equivalency and their ability to make connections between ratios, fractions, and decimals. This was after teaching the same group of students for two years, and placing a large emphasis on this strand. Through conversations with colleagues, we recognized that this is an area many students find challenging, in all grade levels. I began to think about other ways of teaching these concepts that would build a deeper, longer-lasting understanding.

While working in our Math lesson study with Galileo, a problem began to take shape where students would use fictitious countries (named Country A through I) which would each be assigned a number representing “People” and a number representing “Food Units”. Each country was assigned a people to food ratio where we purposefully built in combinations that would bring out student misconceptions (see the chart below). More about that in a minute.

In table groups, students were given a cup that contained the number of food and people present in their assigned country. This was represented by two different colors of tiles. Students had to decide, based on their population if their country was well fed or not. Groups then began to fill in a chart on the Smartboard and were asked, with their groups members, to rank the countries in order of best fed to worst fed. This generated a great deal of discussion within groups and as each group put their ranking up on the board, prepared to defend their choices. This is when the misconceptions began to appear. Students wrestled between countries C and G, finding it difficult to prove which country was better fed with their newly forming understanding of ratios.

Once a ranking was established that the entire class could agree with, students were asked to, using manipulatives, create a ‘twin country’ to each of the countries above that would have the same ratio of food to people, but a different population and to model this. Through this task, it was very apparent which students had a deep understanding of equivalency and who was able to represent their thinking concretely and pictorially. Students also began to generate other ways, besides using manipulatives of demonstrating and explaining equivalent ratios and fractions such as symbolic representation.

This problem led students into additional problems working more directly with fractions.

Country

People

Food

A

1

4

B

4

4

C

7

31

D

2

5

E

3

12

F

2

30

G

6

32

H

5

1

I

15

60



The Unexamined Life is Not Worth Living

Rachelle Savoie is a teacher currently on leave from the Calgary Science School. She has taken a position teaching junior high humanities at the Canadian International School in Abu Dabi, United Arab Emirates.

The Unexamined Life is Not Worth Living

After working at CSS for almost 4 years, I had begun to take the act of questioning for granted. It is ingrained in our culture to question. It is what we base our charter on …inquiry.

However, historically, and in many educational institutions, questioning is not the predominant component of learning. In some cases it is not even encouraged. Upon arriving in the United Arab Emirates and meeting my students, I suddenly realized that many of them had been taught in schools where rote learning and memorization was the norm and questioning was a skill they had not developed.

This summer I had come across a resource called, 6 Hats of Thinking (see link below). Since September I have incorporated the 6 Hats of Thinking in various novel study activities, social studies assignments and current events discussions. This helped the students become comfortable with questioning and laid the ground work for a project I wanted to do for the grade 8 Renaissance unit.

Teaching the Renaissance is one of my favorite units in all the grades. The areas you can explore are endless and there are countless connections students can make to today. I was given an idea of a project a few years ago that I never got around to exploring, and because this year is all about trying new things, I thought it would be the perfect place to do it. This project has many of the elements that I believe all worthwhile learning needs to incorporate.

What I know about teaching and learning is it needs to be relevant, engaging and meaningful. During PD days at CSS we often grapple with how to accomplish this. One way we often talk about authentic learning is allow students to ‘become something’ through their work – that is become a mathematician, become an artist, become a historian. This allows students to realize that the work they are doing is something that people do in the real world. The student becomes part of the learning and becomes something through the learning, as opposed to the learning just happening to them. The project, “Becoming a Humanist,” is something I believe meets these criteria.

Humanism is one of the key ideas that grew from the Renaissance worldview; Questioning, Curiosity, Risk-taking, Learning (For those of you who work in an inquiry based school- sound familiar?). To introduce the project we watched a documentary about Socrates. Many conversations were sparked from it, one in which was around Socrates most famous quote, “The unexamined life is not worth living.” We started discussing why people believe the things that they do. We talked about how people hold many opinions, but wonder can people justify and explain their opinions? From there, students started asking questions about things they had always wondered. What transpired was an enthusiastic level of engagement that I strive to see every day in the classroom. All the work we put in at the beginning of the year on what makes a good question and what are different ways of thinking were starting to materialize.

One of the challenges, but also the liberating part of the discussions, was the fact I had no answers for them. What? A teacher who doesn’t know everything? Shocking, I know. The first part of the project, the part that I think is the most important part and the part I am focusing on in this blog post, was coming up with a question. I encouraged students to come up with a question that people are still searching for an answer to today, a question that many people hold different opinions about. When I started to give some suggestions, the students said, “Miss, if you tell us the question, then we are not being true humanists!” This is entirely correct, so I let them loose.

The next day they needed to have to have their question ready to share. All I can say is, wow! They came up with such insightful questions that I hadn’t even thought of. Questions like: Is it possible to become anything you want? Can dictators be good people? Is equality possible? What is fear? Can the world exist without war? Why do we have to lose something in order to realize how precious it was? Are you in control of what happens in your life? How do you know what you are doing is good? If many people believe something is true, is it?

We are starting the part of the project where they need to find an answer their question. This is requiring them to interview people (family members, teachers, experts) and do their own research. The questions they are examining are difficult and it is going to be a challenging journey to reach an answer that uses logic and reason. However, it is the process of questioning where the real learning is happening. I don’t expect them to be able to fully answer questions that people have been asking for hundreds of years. I am more interested in the process. They are living the life of a humanist; asking questions, having meaningful conversations and examining their own life. “Success is a journey, not a destination. The doing is often more important than the outcome.” –Arthur Ashe

Determining Historical Significance

Students in grade 7 Humanities are currently completing an assignment called 8 Events Leading to Confederation, adapted from the website http://historicalthinking.ca/.

Historical Significance Unit

Inquiry Question: What event is the most significant event in Canada pre-confederation?
This unit opened with a discussion on the difference between ‘the past’ and ‘history’. We examine many events, past and present, using the following criteria:

– The event had deep consequences for many people

– The event affected many people

– The consequences of this event lasted for a long period of time

We evaluated a variety of events including the Vancouver riots, 9/11, Expulsion of the Acadians and more, by creating inquiry questions that would help us to better understanding each event and their impact.

Students were then given 16 events in History to examine using the criteria. Students developed 3 inquiry questions for each event so they could better rate each event and its significance in comparison to other events. After this was complete, the group chose 8 events from the original 16 that they considered most significant based on their research and their ratings.

Next, all 16 events were then put on a timeline, but only the 8 most significant events were represented in image form. The most significant event was largest and the least significant was smallest on their timelines. This visual helped students see not only when these events occurred in comparison to other events, but that some events were occurring simultaneously for extended periods of time. This timeline changed some opinions after visually examining the duration of events in relation to other events in history.

After creating these timelines, students participated in a discussion jigsaw. Each person from their original group was assigned a new group. These new groups discussed the events they thought were most significant, and many individuals were surprised to find that their 8 events did not always match with other students’ choices. Many rich discussions came from this activity as students attempted to change each other’s minds about which events had deep, longer lasting consequences and which events impacted more people. I was impressed with the deep understanding they had acquired while meeting with their original groups. By the end of this discussion, students were to come to a consensus on the 8 most significant events. This proved to be very difficult as many individuals felt strongly about the events they originally chose.



Students then chose an event they would most like to learn more about. They were assigned an event with 2-3 other students who had similar interests. The goal of this next project is to learn about events in more depth and share their knowledge with the class, using the following guiding questions:
  • What was the event, conflict or disagreement?
  • What factors led to this event, conflict or disagreement?
  • What impact did this event and/or conflict have on other events we have studied?
  • What was at stake for all parties involved?
  • How would each of the three major groups (French, British, First Nations) be impacted by this event?
  • Using the criteria for historical significance, explain how this event had a deep and long lasting impact on the future of the country.
  • What if this event had not occurred? What if the results were different?

Inquiring into Waste and Our World

by Deirdre Bailey and Amy Park

Our Grade 4 classes have spent the past three months inquiring into the topic of "Waste and Our World" with the goal of developing an appreciation and understanding of their roles and responsibilities as global citizens of this environmentally fragile and increasingly endangered planet. We had hoped that our inquiry would help students feel empowered to sustain environmentally conscious action as part of their everyday lives.


Our first mission was to collect garbage from the school ground. Students were shocked to discover that we had collected over 4lbs of lunch-related waste in one day and that this amount was repeated by the following class the next day! This activity made it clear that action for the environment was needed and could have a very real effect in our immediate community. As a group, we concluded that one minute public service announcements highlighting a need for change in our daily practices would be the best way to inform our school peers and inspire action.

In order to build understanding and knowledge prior to designing their PSA's, students worked through a variety of tasks which included:
  • creating a decomposition timeline using human waste collected in the immediate area
  • discussing the composition of various human waste items and the factors affecting their breakdown
  • digitally documenting human waste samples from our school grounds
  • completing a retrieval chart with hypotheses on their specimen's origin and ultimate destination
Once students had a good understanding of the impact our human waste can have on the environment, we turned our attention to natural waste and consideration of how our natural world discards, reuses and recycles. As part of our exploration we:
Armed with a new understanding of how human and natural waste fit in our world, students watched some exemplar PSAs and advertisements aimed at communicating powerful environmental messages. We then worked together to build a rubric outlining what exemplary work might look like!

CATEGORIES
Lots to improve, keep working/trying.
(Kindergarten-ish)
You’re okay but...

Good job, met expectations

Excellent!
THIS IS YOUR TARGET!!!

Content
Research
Boring and meaningless facts! Used only a single source. Copied!
Partially researched, lacking information, “is that it?” incomplete
Well researched, descriptive, relevant.
Interesting and helpful facts! Engaging! Has obviously used multiple sources. Original and in own words.
Content
Script
Uses “tired” words. Lacks description. Information is unclear. Off topic and confusing. Unconvincing. Audience is bored...
Unconvincing, “I’m confused”
Sufficient, concise, competent, clear message.
Uses juicy words. Descriptive. Is clear on the facts. On topic and makes sense. Persuasive. Exciting - captivates the audience’s attention.
Images
Inappropriate, fuzzy, irrelevant, unrealistic, doesn’t go with the subject/script/topic
Unpleasant, may not be appropriate to message
Appropriate, pleasing, satisfying
Realistic! Relevant! Memorable! Detailed! Appropriate! Clear! Interesting!
Voice
Lacks expression, boring, mumbly, too quiet or too loud, “notalkinglikethis” and “no.... talking.... like.... this.....”
A little mumbly, a hard time following, needs practice
Clear, nice, good expression.
Lots of expression, enthusiastic, good volume, enunciated well, speaks at a great pace
Groupwork
Making one person do all the work, “me first”, arguing, fighting, using only one person’s idea, nobody is cooperating, bossing, all talking at once, “my idea is better”, not sharing
Inefficient, needs help and support, argumentative
Nice to people, shares, demonstrates positive body language
Cooperative, inclusive, everybody has a voice, communicative, compromising, taking turns, incorporating everyone’s ideas, on task, “you first” mentality


FInally, students supplemented what they had learned with the info on their retrieval sheets and internet resources to create one-page storyboards communicating their ideas effectively and concisely. Once their storyboards had been approved, they worked in collaborative groups to add voice to their own images creating short movies highlighting differences between human and natural waste and the impact they both have on our world.

Students had the opportunity to showcase their first products in front of their classmates, after which they were provided with constructive feedback that was related to the rubric and based on the work. Throughout this process, students learned how to give feedback as well as how to receive it, and use it to improve. They were able to learn by reflecting on the work they and their classmates had created, and were then given an opportunity to use what they'd learned to refine their final movie project.

Here's an overview of the process:



Of the 22 projects, our group selected the best of the best to represent our learning and the message we hope to convey. Please help us get the word out by commenting below, sharing your feedback and your ideas on how we might be able to share these with a broader audience. Thanks for listening!


Student Exemplar 1: Nature Killers!


Student Exemplar 2: Think About the Future


See more examples of student PSAs here

These Kids Get It!


Today was amazing for a number of reasons.

We finished our decomposition lab this morning. It had been an enlightening few weeks of learning what becomes of a perishable food, halved and left in the open for three weeks. Some awesome things happen to rotting fruit after it starts to smell, not least of which are fluid loss and bacteria growth. This morning, the tomato had given birth to a new family of fruit flies, all of whom remained happily trapped under the wrapping as our young scientists whooped victoriously while pressing their faces to the creeping mass of molding vegetable.


As today was the last day of our lab, we were burying our specimens in dirt with plans to test soil content and plant growth in the New Year. Most students were happy to put an end to an experiment that was becoming increasingly hard on the stomach, however one group in particular stood out as they proceeded solemnly to the dirt pile with their specimen, chanting the name "Alfred" in melancholic tones. "Aaaaalfreeed, life won't be the same without your stink... Aaaaalfreeeed, you taught us a lot about mould.... Aaaaalreed, we are going to bury you so you can grow a plant..." Alfred was their cucumber.

When I think back to the things I remember from Grade 4, I struggle to recall anything memorable outside of field experiences, Christmas holidays and family trips to Ireland. I imagine however, that if I had spent two weeks watching Alfred shrink, stink, and give birth to fruit flies, that I would remember Alfred. As adults, we seem to spend a tremendous amount of time discussing, warning and lecturing without experiencing and we forget so easily that our most powerful inspirations to date will have almost exclusively resulted from actual emotional experiences.

After lunch we had a presenter come and talk about endangered species in North America, specifically wolves. She asked the kids a number of questions which they were eager to answer, one of which was about why maintaining the wolf population was of benefit to trees. Thirty plus hands went up.

"Because the nutrients in their poop help build rich soil for plant growth..."

"Because they eat animals which would destroy the trees in larger quantities..."

"Because they sometimes eat plants and poop the seeds which helps distribute the growth..."

Three months exploring the Weaselhead and connecting online in order to develop meaningful videos highlighting local natural waste and its place in our ecosystem had paid off. Natural organisms have a place in the wild, these kids had seen it. "Wow, you guys really get it" was our presenter's response. "I have this conversation all the time with adults and it is hard for them to understand how wolves are connected to the trees."

"EVERYthing is connected to the trees!" was one indignant reply. Followed by:

"..those adults, you have to explain a lot of things to them, there's so much they just don't understand..."

We learned a lot about native species in Alberta in 45 minutes. We learned a worrying amount about what our government says they're doing to protect them, as even to 9 year olds, many of their policies appear outdated and nonsensical. I gave the students sticky notes at the end of the presentation to jot ideas and questions about our current Endangered Species Act, what's working and what we should change. One student kept coming back for more notes... "Three's the limit right Mrs. Bailey? I can only have three ideas?" Who told this kid and at what point in his life that he could only have three ideas? He wants to write to the government on behalf of every one of the 13 male sage grouse left in our province. Then he wants to tell them that shooting wolves won't save cariboo, that Little Red Riding Hood was a liar, that wolves aren't the bad guys. He also wants to tell them to forget about the oil in the ground on the Blood Tribe land and just re-introduce the Swift Fox population the way they'd planned in 1973 and that they should be ashamed they've waited so long. He's got classmates on board.

Adults should remember that it's that simple. Kids are already curious and creative. They want to explore things and find out what's happening. Nothing about who they are is average, obedient or passive. All that is left to us, is to foster an awareness of the possibilities that surround them, to allow them to explore and then to get out of the way. Let them ask questions, make decisions, be different. There's more to their futures than resigned consumption and obedience.

Goodbyes

Guest post from Calgary Science School student teacher, Mariana Sanchez.
(Cross posted on Mariana's blog)

December 2nd was my official last day as a student teacher. The last day was a total whirlwind! I felt like I was running all over the place trying to get our last minute labs organized while I was trying not to focus on the fact that it was our last day.

It’s so hard to think that I won’t get to go to the school everyday. The group of students went from being a group of kids to my kids. I’ve grown attached to all of them and I will miss them! If I had any doubt about being a teacher I now have 50 extra reasons of why I want to keep teaching. Having the ability to inspire someone to push themselves to excellence or to get them to keep going when they want to give up is something not to be taken lightly. To have a student say that I’ve made their day, is amazing. It’s not something that I can just walk away from.

As much as I taught them about algebra and integers-they taught me about patience and acceptance. They waited calmly as I sometimes stuttered and fumbled through material. I will always remember my very first lesson when I said I was nervous and they all started to clap for me, and told me I would do just fine. I got the impression that they were thinking, ‘we’ll make a teacher out of you, don’t worry.’ The students were so encouraging after the first couple lessons and would tell me I did a good job and that they learned something (even though I’m pretty sure it was a review)

It will be hard to leave the school community too. The whole staff was supportive of us. When we were having questions about assessment one of the teachers started a “Lunch and Learn” where we could bring any questions about school and she would help us work through them. We had questions about portfolios and social networking and got a crash course in how to set up Twitter and Blogs. I had a question about how to use algebra tiles and we got a mini tutorial. Even when we were trying to write our proposal for a conference coming up we got extra help and got ideas from the conversations we were having in the staffroom. I felt like everything was open to us and they didn’t hold back any knowledge from us. This had a huge impact on my experience this year!

I am glad that I can keep volunteering in different areas at the school. The only hard part will be trying to balance this with my own classes and work. I don’t think I’m quite ready to leave the school yet and the learning/teaching environment they have built. There is still more learning to be done!

Mixing the Real and the Virtual

As written in a previous post, one of our teachers, Dan McWilliam has been playing with augmented reality in his wood shop elective class.

As a new semester begins - students can now visualize how their designs will appear in the real world. And even go so far as to place themselves digitally beside their 3D designs as this student has done with their chair design..